anth
Contributor
BigTuna,
I've had a 30lb wing with a ss plate for about a year now. Since then, it has been with me on well over a hundred dives in New England with a 7mm farmer john. I was really concerned that 30 lbs lift would not be enough, but it is a thing of beauty, it's plenty. A few weeks ago, I took it to Belize and dove it with a 3mm suit, and it was great there. I am a smaller guy, somewhere around 140 lbs and wearing around 16 lbs of lead with my 7mm, so your mileage may vary. See if you can borrow a wing and try it out.
I'm very familiar with the compression of suits at depth, but I figure your 2/3 loss of bouyancy at 66 feet might be a little conservative, as I imagine that Boyle's Law isn't perfectly applicable. The individual nitrogen-filled cells in the neoprene must have a little bit of rigidity anyway, right?
You're on the right track, BigTuna! Good luck!
-Anthony
I've had a 30lb wing with a ss plate for about a year now. Since then, it has been with me on well over a hundred dives in New England with a 7mm farmer john. I was really concerned that 30 lbs lift would not be enough, but it is a thing of beauty, it's plenty. A few weeks ago, I took it to Belize and dove it with a 3mm suit, and it was great there. I am a smaller guy, somewhere around 140 lbs and wearing around 16 lbs of lead with my 7mm, so your mileage may vary. See if you can borrow a wing and try it out.
I'm very familiar with the compression of suits at depth, but I figure your 2/3 loss of bouyancy at 66 feet might be a little conservative, as I imagine that Boyle's Law isn't perfectly applicable. The individual nitrogen-filled cells in the neoprene must have a little bit of rigidity anyway, right?
In reference to the aforementioned rescue value of a huge wing with a giant lift capacity, that's not what I learned in my rescue training. If my buddy is tired or stressed and needs to ditch their weights on the surface, I'm going to be busy helping them, not trying to hold onto a few bucks worth of lead. Additionally, correct-sized wings remove some of the temptation to use a BC as a lift bag.divecon15:The big thing that you have overlooked is your DIVE BUDDY. What happens if he/she gets in trouble and needs you help? When buying a BC the first thing I tell people to look at is the lift. You can never have too much lift. What happens if your buddy is tired or stressed on the surface and has to hand you their 20# weight belt? If you only have a 30# lift then all of a sudden you are 15 or so pounds neg..... I know you could always drop the belt but.... You need to build in extra for emergency's!![]()
You're on the right track, BigTuna! Good luck!
-Anthony